Sounds unbelievable, right? Yet, there's a woman living with a genuine medical condition that turns such normally delightful sounds into sources of acute distress. Hearing her own child laugh triggers intense, agonizing pain for her. What could possibly explain this strange phenomenon?
Thankfully, this condition is rare, but the reality is, it does exist.
Oddity Central:
An English woman suffering from a rare condition known as painful hyperacusis says that everyday noises, such as her children’s laughter, her friends’ voices, and even music cause her paralyzing pain.
Until 18 months ago, Karen Cook worked as a cabin crew and lived a perfectly normal life with her husband and their two boys. But then she started experiencing something strange and painful. Most of us shudder at the thought of losing our sense of hearing, but what if that same sense was amplified by orders of magnitude, making everyday sounds, no matter how soothing, impossible to bear? That’s what Karen started experiencing in 2022 when her hyperacusis suddenly set in. All of a sudden, sound became torture for her. The voices of loved ones, chatting with friends, or listening to her favorite music caused her unbearable headaches to the point where she began to isolate herself just to make them stop.
“It’s like someone poured hot lava into my ears and my head is on fire, my whole head hurts, especially behind my eyes,” Karen recently told the BBC. “It’s like a migraine, like you want to open your head to relieve the pressure.”
Ever since she was originally diagnosed with hyperacusis, Karen has been trying to cure, or at least keep its symptoms in check, but things have been getting worse. She now spends most of her time indoors, because she can’t handle all the noise of the outside world, and even when she is home alone, she wears earplugs and noise blockers to protect herself.
On Christmas day, while her sons, ages 7 and 11, were excitedly opening their presents, she was in the next room watching them from behind a window, because she just couldn’t handle listening to their loud voices and laughter.
“Something as beautiful as my children’s laughter, hearing their voices, is like torture for me,” the 49-year-old woman said. “I would sit and watch them through the window opening their Christmas presents because it was too noisy for me to be in the room and they would come up to the window and show them to me.”
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Unfortunately, there's no cure for this unusual condition, making every day a battle for this woman as she tries to dodge the intense discomfort that comes from hearing the normal, yet to her, painfully beautiful sounds of everyday life.